New Jersey Opera Theater Presents Preview of Summer Operatic Quality

Nancy
Plum

Summer opera came early this year in Princeton.
Out of the ashes of the Opera Festival of New Jersey, two organizations
are promising the return of regional opera to this area this summer.
The Princeton Festival, which will be presenting Sweeney Todd
in July; and New Jersey Opera Theater (NJOT), which will open
its season in August. NJOT provided a preview of its operatic
vision on Friday night in Richardson Auditorium with a concert
production of Verdi's Il Trovatore. NJOT's previous productions
had been with student artists, and this was the company's first
foray into professional production. With an opera full of famed
melodies, lush orchestration, and hummable choruses, NJOT had
an opportunity to provide an in-depth operatic experience. Although
some in the audience came to the show expecting a fully-staged
production, all seemed to leave satisfied with having heard some
excellent singing.

Presenting the opera in concert version
created the impression of a recital of operatic arias and ensemble
numbers, with longer than usual breaks to allow singers on and
off stage. The first few numbers introduced all the singers and
their characters to the audience and set the tone for the evening's
performance quality. The stand-out performers of the concert were
soprano Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs, singing the role of Leonora;
and mezzo Eugenie Grunewald, who performed the role of Azucena.
Although her voice may have been a bit too forward for some tastes,
Ms. Blancke-Biggs was a true Verdi soprano, smoothly maneuvering
the runs with rich clarity and impeccable timing. She had the
role of the Verdi heroine down, floating high Bs and Cs out of
nowhere with ease. Ms. Grunewald assumed a "don't mess with
me" posture from the minute she walked onstage obviously
seething about something. Her singing was equally as determined,
and she lived up to her description in the program as a performer
"who can reach off the stage and grab the listener by the
throat."

The male singers of the cast also exhibited
a vast amount of experience on the operatic stage. Bass Stefan
Szkafarowsky settled down by the second act in his portrayal of
Ferrando, setting the plot of the opera with his opening narration.
The interplay between Mr. Szkafarowsky and the chorus of soldiers
in the beginning of Act III was precise in a musical patter reminiscent
of Rossini. As Il Conte di Luna, Peter Castaldi was sufficiently
swarthy, and although he did not have the natural volume of Mr.
Szkafarowsky, his vocal tone was very even.

Verdi operas
include significant choral writing, and the chorus for this production
was clean and precise, but not overly loud. The famed "Anvil"
chorus could have used a bit more "oomph," but the singing
in all of the choruses was evenly blended for the most part. Little
attempt was made to reign in vibrato (affecting the women more
than the men), and fatigue may have accounted for the blastiness
of the tenor section in the well-known "Miserere."

The
orchestra compiled for this production was a bit large for the
space and location of the artists; much emphasis had obviously
been placed in having a lush string sound. Conductor Michael Recchiuti
kept the tempo moving right along, and there were a number of
notable wind and brass solos, including clarinetists Josh Kovach
and Rie Suzuki, bassoonists Darryl Harthshorne and Jacob Smith,
and trumpeter Robert Skoniczin.

NJOT is trying to raise
the level of its performance from student to young professional.
Friday night's performance was a good first effort, even though
it would have been more visually effective to have all the principals
memorize their music, rather than walk around with books curled
under their arms in some cases. This summer, the company will
open its season in mid-August in McCarter Theatre, a risky undertaking
for a first season. NJOT will surely refine what was presented
Friday night to provide an intriguing addition to Princeton's
summer entertainment.